Difference between feeders being eating whole and "quick" vs. being ripped apart

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rallysman;2052764; said:
If it will absolutely eat nothing but live, then that's alright. Otherwise, it's not necessary, and even if they do it in the wild, it's cruel. IMO, the wild argument is BS since I've never seen someone chuck live fish into a small glass box in the wild.


Thank you for phrasing it that way ;) As we disagree on this issue completely ;) I believe in live food and feed live as regularly as possible. And believe the non live is the only way regardless, to be complete BS.
 
cichlaguapote;2053063; said:
And that is based on???




If you had to wait for someone to feed you, and weren't sure when your next meal would come then you probably wouldn't be as picky..

Do you think my fish would rather have a deveined/deheaded whole market shrimp full of all meat, a pellet that has garlic added to it to increase appetite or a goldfish that is guts/eyeballs/poop?

My dog loves meat.. do I feed her bunnys though? no..
I'm too worn out to debate, but yah market meat is an option - I didn't think of that.
 
Guerillah;2052983; said:
What method did you use to convert your fish? My pbass eat about 35 goldfish in a period of 24 hours, and its getting kind of expensive not to mention I hate the scales going everywhere and making the water a mess. I have tried cut up market shrimp and they arent interested at all, ive even put it on a thin fishing line and dangled it around in the tank from far away and they ignore it. I just got a silver aro the other day and he took shrimp and crickets off me today and loved it, wish I could get my gar and pbass like that...

If your Cichla are eating 35 feeder in one day they are in my opinion depending on how many you have.. large enough to start feeding every 1-4 days ;) And will be just as healthy as any.

Training onto shrimp or anythign else is done a few ways.. but one still requires live food..
 
cichlaguapote;2053063; said:
And that is based on???




If you had to wait for someone to feed you, and weren't sure when your next meal would come then you probably wouldn't be as picky..

Do you think my fish would rather have a deveined/deheaded whole market shrimp full of all meat, a pellet that has garlic added to it to increase appetite or a goldfish that is guts/eyeballs/poop?

My dog loves meat.. do I feed her bunnys though? no..

Come on, you gotta observe the difference in "eagerness" with which fish accept various food. Three tanks, three examples:

- My RTCs and Gars eagerly fight for pellets and fish and prawns. I donot see any particular preference. Oscar eats pellets and does not chase feeders at all.
- Two silver aros and an asian do not chase feeders (i have not seen them eat any to date) instead eating crikets and Hikari pellets very readily (no delay - no spitting out before eating again). These carnivores live happily with 2 redbelly pacus and 2 kois ... in fact, the three aros have to hurry for food. (Considering to relocate pacus and kois ...they are growing very fast on cricket diet)
- Arapaimas eagerly chases down any fish that is put in their tank and are first at Hikari pellets. Jardini and silver aro eat feeders but are not particular at chasing anything - they do fight for pellets. <sigh> delhezi does not chase anything but will eat anything small enough and near enough. Now, for the crikets, jardini and silver love those = eat no spit out. Arapaimas eat everything that is thrown in - they gauge themselve, BUT they tend to spit out crikets first and then eat again (sometimes spit again). I suppose it is good for bichir who always waits at the bottom.

Moral of the story? There is a clear preference for various foods by various fish. As loving fishkeeper, i do like to give food that fish enjoy (with all precautions taken of course for disease control).

PS: your dog probably would not eat rabit even if you give it. Kill it - yes. Eat - no.
 
rallysman;2052877; said:
If the fish is captive raised it's more than fair.
If it's wild caught, then the last thing you should worry about is it's food. In that situation it would be accustomed to rivers and/or lakes/oceans so keeping it in a (comparatively) tiny environment would be much worse than only offering pellets IMO.

Rallysman makes a good point here.
 
I feed live but only do it on the weekends. It's more personal preferance and A nice addition to a balanced diet. pellet,krill and talapia during the week and feeders on the weekend
 
Tongue33;2053107; said:
If your Cichla are eating 35 feeder in one day they are in my opinion depending on how many you have.. large enough to start feeding every 1-4 days ;) And will be just as healthy as any.

Training onto shrimp or anythign else is done a few ways.. but one still requires live food..

Well thats with 3 of them so not sure.. I will start trying dmacks way but was just curious what other methods people used.
 
Starvation... mainly. Or feed the food you want if they don't eat it... Pull it with a net and try again tomorrow. So still starvation.

How large are they?

Going to carry the rest of this conversation to your Profile as to not further derail. ;)
 
Ultimately it is starving the fish into eating non-live. Some require stimulation, like dangling and trawling a piece of shrimp.

Can be time consuming because you have to do the stimulating or just have to clean up the uneaten food.

My gars and rtcs took to pellet quite readily (no starving necessary) and very late in their lives (when i realised that i am not gonna pay for life feeders all the time). Luckily silver aros and arapaimas start eating from the begining without the need to starve them (Hikari pellets seem to agree with them).
 
I haven't got any objections to feeding live fish to my charges. I do have a problem when people feed fish feeders that are too large subsequently causing the feeder to suffer unduly. However, that's besides the point.

Most fish that are predatory have some capacity to crush with their throats, their gill rakers have rough or toothed pads on top, and you'll often see them moving their throats in and out rapidly to scale and crush their prey. Granted, it's still far from an instant death, but far better than repeated dismemberment and panic.

Remember too, that fish don't really want their prey to be chewing on their insides once they get there either, so they do their best to disable the prey beyond that capacity.

Large, predatory fish eat other fish in the wild, and at times, their instincts are too difficult to over-ride. If they can be weaned onto artificial foods, great, but if not, feeders it is.

One point that another poster on here mentioned was that eating a whole fish would be unpleasant for the pets. I don't think that's necessarily true, in fact, that whole fish (if in good health), would provide all the right nutrients required for the pet to grow, heal etc. moreso in fact than a lot of the cheaper lines of pellets etc., or even the cocktails of frozen food some feed to their pets.

Frozen and dry foods are certainly more convenient for the owners, but caution must be exercised to provide all the essential nutrients to the pets. I don't believe a fish's enthusiasm for a certain food type indicates the fact that it's absolutely better for the fish e.g. Discus getting constipated on a diet too heavy in bloodworms. It's quite easy for larger animals to die of malnutrition without ever starving.

So, in summary, feed feeders of a suitable size to your pets if need be, and do not labour under the mis-guided view that pellets/dead food are the only way to go about giving your pets what they need. Above all else, it is our pets we're looking after, not just our own comfort.
 
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